Faith-based film business trying to attract audiences

BY RYAN FAUGHNDERTRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

In late February, actor Dennis Quaid joined religious rock group MercyMe at a Dallas concert to sing — and promote his new movie. The band has toured for much of the last year in support of the new film “I Can Only Imagine,” which tells the story of how lead singer Bart Millard wrote the best-selling Christian single ever after the death of his father.

For a biblically minded movie to succeed in theaters, it used to be enough to screen the film for pastors months ahead of time and create study guides for campus youth groups.

As the campaign for the new Christian music biopic illustrates, that’s no longer the case. Studios now have to go to greater lengths to attract devout audiences in an increasingly challenged faith-based film business, as the market for Christian movies becomes more crowded.

“Because there have been so many movies made for this audience, they have become much more discerning,” said Howard Cohen, co-founder of Roadside Attractions, the distributor of “I Can Only Imagine.” “And they will choose the ones that not only have a strong, Christian message but are bigger-feeling, more studio-type films.”

Just a few years ago, the faith-based genre produced multiple surprise hits as studios ramped up investment in religious-themed movies, resulting in successes such as “Heaven Is for Real” and “God’s Not Dead.” The rate of faith-based films released in theaters annually has doubled since 2012 to about 12 a year.

But the genre is now in a surprising slump. The last bona fide commercial hit designed for religious audiences was Lionsgate’s “The Shack,” about a man’s encounters with personifications of God, which collected $97 million worldwide.

Movies explicitly about people practicing or defending their beliefs — once a reliably bankable subgenre, despite poor reviews — have delivered diminishing returns.

“God’s Not Dead 2” grossed $20 million in the U.S. and Canada in 2016, a third of the domestic box office of its predecessor. (Another sequel comes out this month.) Titles such as “Same Kind of Different as Me” and “A Question of Faith” faltered at the box office last year.

“There’s been significantly more films trying to compete for oxygen, and a lot of them have failed financially,” said Rich Peluso, head of Sony Pictures’ faith-based label, Affirm Films.

That’s a problem for a movie industry that has been eager to get churchgoers from the pews to the theaters ever since Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ” grossed $370 million domestically and set the standard for getting churches to buy tickets in bulk.

Christians are an appealing market for Hollywood, which is looking for ways to expand the cinema audience as digital competition causes long-term declines in theatrical attendance. The movie business is routinely criticized for overlooking the values of religious Americans, and faithbased filmmaking was seen as a way to rebut that narrative and attract an audience that usually doesn’t go to the movies.

Facing a wearied audience, some filmmakers are trying to adapt by expanding into more subgenres, including romances, sports dramas, comedies and documentaries.

“We’re developing beyond just the genre of sermon-on-film,” said Bill Reeves, head of Tennessee-based WTA Group, a marketing firm that specializes in faith-based media. “We’re trying to answer the question of ‘What else is out there?’”

Others are putting their faith in Bible-based stories with big-name stars. On Friday, Affirm Films released “Paul, Apostle of Christ,” which blends Scripture and fiction to tell the story of the apostle’s last days. The new movie features actor Jim Caviezel in his first biblical role since he played Jesus in “The Passion of the Christ.”

Affirm is hoping Caviezel’s star power with the faith audience will make a difference at the multiplex. To promote the film, the actor spoke at an event at Liberty University that was simulcast to 1,200 churches with clips of the movie.

“We definitely are connecting closer to the heart of pastors and church leaders than we have on pretty much any other film we’ve done,” Affirm’s Peluso said.